There isn't one, and for a very good reason - you have to nail the business
rules, and these won't be the same everywhere. For example, on what dat does
your week start? It's Sunday for you (I assume, since you're in Australia),
but it's Monday in the USA. Some businesses run Thursday
Assuming this is UniVerse on UNIX, you have the PORT.STATUS command in the UV
account, and you have ipcs -m | grep aceb at the operating system level.
If it's Windows-based UniVerse you still have PORT.STATUS. The equivalent of
ipcs is shrdump, but you don't have an equivalent for grep. So
[ad]
On the decompiling of .net source code - I am about to release some exciting
new software on this front to help in the security of .net applications,
including obfuscation, encryption, virtualisation and one click deploy.
We are still in beta but watch this space for our new developments
Thank you very much for your help!
in Unix, PORT.STATUS only show the users with the same name but this is
my requeriment.
Thanks again.
El miC), 11-07-2007 a las 16:05 +1000, Ray Wurlod escribiC3:
Assuming this is UniVerse on UNIX, you have the PORT.STATUS command in the UV
account, and
Likewise for the business definitions of months and years. I've got clients
that have 13 EVEN 4 week months and one has 12 'months' offset by no-one
knows why days and an off year. For example, today, July 11, 2007 is period
06/08, meaning period 06 in year '08'. I ain't making this stuff up.
The
For simple stuff like this you can use find on windows on a command
line.
Hth
Colin Alfke
Calgary Canada
-Original Message-
From: Ray Wurlod
Assuming this is UniVerse on UNIX, you have the PORT.STATUS command in
the UV account, and you have ipcs -m | grep aceb at the operating system
The following cron response came to me at 2:30pm in the day. We have
programs that run at various times, but this is the first time I've seen
this. What are the probable causes? TIA, Karl
* BEGIN CRON EMAIL
1537 record(s) selected to SELECT list #0.
A fatal
Does anyone know of, have, use, or be willing to share a utility that
'converts' old-style PICK-type Virtual and I-descriptors in UniData to legal
ODBC/UniData descriptors? For example, changing Tfilename;X;n;m functions to
TRANS and like conversions. I am in the process of opening up hundreds of
Zeller's Congruence finds the day of the week and, at least on UV, isn't
the same as what we use. It is 0 - 6, 0 is Saturday, and UV is 1 - 7, 1
is Monday.
-Original Message-
From: MAJ Programming [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2007 8:17 AM
To:
We use JBoss. Basically we use CallHTTP POST data to JBoss, and JBoss
format the request, and put it in JMS queue, send to the destination
(application).
We did that way since we've been using CallHTTP for a few years and our
UniBasic developer is comfortable using it.
UniData's XML
I know you said don't tell me it's the base date, but the date 1/1/68
was chosen for a reason - it means divide by 365.25 actually gives the
right answer...
Cheers,
Wol
-Original Message-
From: MAJ Programming [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 11 July 2007 14:17
To:
I know you said don't tell me it's the base date, but the date 1/1/68
was chosen for a reason - it means divide by 365.25 actually gives the
right answer...
Anybody that relies on that in code is bound to get a nasty surprise.
There are dates for which that doesn't work. Try it with July 7,
When we first converted from Pick to Unidata, Unidata had a conversion
account that you used to restore the account into and then it converted
it. This was on Aix - I haven't seen anything on like it on Windows. It
was also back when Unidata was Unidata (not IBM or Informix).
IBM may be able to
Shin,
How have you been?
Joe
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2007 9:52 AM
To: u2-users@listserver.u2ug.org
Subject: RE: [U2] JMS and Unidata
We use JBoss. Basically we use CallHTTP POST data to JBoss, and JBoss
format
AIX, Unidata 6.1, SB+ 5.3.8
I have a client who is experiencing something rather strange. Every few
seconds, and not with any particularly regularity, topas will report a
spike in disk writes, maxing out one or more disks to 100% utilization. CPU
utilization, on the other hand, remains nominal
Kevin King wrote:
AIX, Unidata 6.1, SB+ 5.3.8
I have a client who is experiencing something rather strange. Every few
seconds, and not with any particularly regularity, topas will report a
spike in disk writes, maxing out one or more disks to 100% utilization. CPU
utilization, on the other
Are you running JFS2?
On Jul 11, 2007, at 1:34 PM, Kevin King wrote:
AIX, Unidata 6.1, SB+ 5.3.8
I have a client who is experiencing something rather strange.
Every few
seconds, and not with any particularly regularity, topas will
report a
spike in disk writes, maxing out one or more
Sounds like swapping - how much physical RAM and swap space?
File system fragmentation?
You should be able to find a SMART Disk utility which may also prove helpful
useful.
The DPMonitor (http://deltek.us ) will also track individual and system wide
processes
Subject: Re: [U2] Tracking Disk
Karl
I can't see enough from your posting, but if you are running UniVerse
foreground processes from crontab as root then please don't especially
AIX.
Change to a non-root crontab
Regards
JayJay
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
There was a utility package that was used by UniData services - it used
various Unix tools to convert the Dictionaries (you needed a full compiler).
Worth an ask... UCONV3 I think. It converted *accounts* save in old
format BTW - not just Dictionaries.
To be honest - when I've done
So we're guessing.
I gotta believe that there's something to it instead of simply counting
days, dividing by 365.25, carrying the 3, square root of October etc.
How does 1/1/68 mean 'divide by 365.25'? Also, divide 'what' by 365.25 ?
Considering how incredibly often the function is used and how
21 matches
Mail list logo